4 Silicon Valley firms including Apple Inc. and Google Inc. have consented to a new agreement that would resolve an antitrust legal claim by tech workers, who blamed the companies of scheming to abstain from poaching each other’s employees.

The case has been strictly viewed because of the likelihood of enormous harms being rewarded and for the chance to look into the world of some of America’s best tech firms.

US District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, Calif., rejected a $324.5 million settlement of the claim last year as excessively low after one of the named claimants objected.

That employee will support the new contract, his lawyer Daniel Girard said, which could be a joint payment of $415 million; the New York Times reported referring a person close to the concessions.

Delegates for Apple, Intel and Adobe declined to remark. A Google representative couldn’t be arrived at, nor could a lawyer for the claimants.

The case was based mostly on emails in which Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, previous Google CEO Eric Schmidt and some of their opponents’ detailed plans to abstain from poaching one another’s prized engineers.

In dismissing the $324.5 million deal, Koh over and again alluded to a related 2013 settlement including Disney and Intuit.

Apple and Google employees got relatively less than Disney employees, Koh said, despite the fact that claimants’ attorneys had “substantially more influence” against Apple and Google.

To match the prior settlement, the deal with Apple, Google, Intel and Adobe “would need to total at least $380 million,” Koh said.

In the short court filing on Tuesday, the firms said claimants would file a detailed clarification of the new deal “quickly.” Koh will then likely choose whether to acknowledge or reject it.